Full Text Search Details... the Leading Forms of Rural Co-operation in the United States and Europe — Stories That Show How Farmers Can Co-operate by Showing How They Have Done ... ... be done, but a book of actual reports of what has been done and is doing; stories based on first-hand investigations. I went to Ireland, France and D... ...erest and enthusiasm for co-operation by means of genuine "human interest" stories of co-operation experience, and also furnish, with the added help o... ...y Situation : Successful Produce Marketing 90 CHAPTER XI More Co-operation Stories from the Northwest: Co-operative Laundry Work, Live Stock Shipping,... ...in Massachusetts, Minnesota, Illinois, North Carolina, the Philippines and Hawaii. As for the technical side of the matter, the special pro- cedure ne... ...re likely to attend. Light re- freshments are served ; there are songs and stories, games and gossip, a talk perhaps by one of the men, or an essay by... ...nation and every individual, of good coming out of evil. When I was in the Hawaiian Islands, in 1910, I learned that the sugar farmers, depending upon...

Full Text Search Details...del an Old Farmhouse. . 4 Heartt's Pippin 168 Horticultural Matters at the Hawaiian Islands 174 Hebe Pear igg Hints on Transplanting Evergreens. . . 2... ...searching for cheap homes in the country. Having heard so many conflicting stories about this new settlement, I determined to go there and make a pers... ...District ofNew York. 34 The Horticulturist. England mansion, with its two stories in front, and its roof sloping almost to tlie ground behind and ove... ...l men, who ought to, and do know better, to tell their confiding customers stories of " immediate bearing," simply be- cause it will induce them to pa... ...or" only made sluices for Boreas of the north storm to whistle his ghostly stories through of dark nights, as it used to seem to us in our childhood. ... ... maples, etc., for our street shades. Reuben. HORTICULTURAL MATTERS AT THE HAWAIIAN ISLANDS. FROM OUR OWN CORRESPONDENT. In the tropical regions, the ... ... and others, exotic in character, which have EorticuUural Blatters at the Hawaiian Islands. 175 been brouglit here by the early settlers, or introduc... ...here by the early settlers, or introduced through the efforts of the Royal Hawaiian Agricultural Society, by Dr. Iliklebrand, who is now in China. The... ...received the appointment of Royal Com- missioner of Immigration. The Royal Hawaiian Agricultural Society, to improve so valuable an opportunity, at th...

Full Text Search Details...und in a cave in some bluffwhere the bees have stored tons of honey. These stories, especially the tons of honey part, are only imaginary and hatched ... ...n mind the Mongoose, which was introduced into Jamaica and afterwards into Hawaii for the purpose of destroj'- ing rais in the sugar cane In both case... ...side. In Mexico the oranges are a reeking mass of crawling maggots, and in Hawaii a very large percentage of the melon and cucumber crop is ren- dered...

Full Text Search Details...orldLibrary.net/Copyrights.html). World Public Library Association P.O. Box 22687 Honolulu, Hawaii 96823 info@WorldLibrary.net Copyright... ...nderstand to whom; they are , indebted for the ,,',,' r* i , r i i 1 1 quaint : sayi'riigs and f tinny stories and Competitions be^kehing someone who ... ...cried out he would blow out his brains and murder every one in the house. Donald was too familiar with stories of camp crime 92 GUM to resist an atta...

Full Text Search Details...orldLibrary.net/Copyrights.html). World Public Library Association P.O. Box 22687 Honolulu, Hawaii 96823 info@WorldLibrary.net Copyright... ...oil of that region, than we can grow them at the East, but we were not prepared for such extrava- gant stories, and are inclined to think the variety ... ...e at once, will find themselves sadly disappointed in the results. We state this because we think such stories injurious to the future prog- ress of f... ... made at the meeting of the Convention of Western New York Fruit Growers, at Rochester, which beat the stories in the NewYork Times "all hollow." We c... ...l from seeds 50 years old taken out of the herbarium of Forster. Let us frankly own that we read these stories with incredulity ; to our mind such so-...

Full Text Search Details...om them help and encouragement, while others impressed him as "pretty good stories" written by "kind friends" to perpetuate agreeable personal memorie... ... letters for publication. EDITH ARMSTRONG TALBOT. CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE I HAWAIIAN LIFE. 1839-1860 ... 3 II WILLIAMS COLLEGE. 1860-1862 . . 41 III LI... ... FACING PAGE Birthplace of Samuel Chapman Armstrong on the Island of Maui, Hawaiian Islands . . 8 The entrance to Stone House at Honolulu . . 14 Famil... ...4 PART I SAMUEL CHAPMAN ARMSTRONG SAMUEL CHAPMAN ARMSTRONG CHAPTER I HAWAIIAN LIFE. 1839-1860 The history of a man's childhood is the descriptio... ...tage and environment. He was born January 30, 1839, on the island of Maui, Hawaiian Islands, and brought up amid the soft airs and noble scenery of th... ...home of his parents, Richard and Clarissa Armstrong, mis- sionaries to the Hawaiians. Although the family remained in Mauibut a year after his birth, ... ...here. We have power over life itself. We have good times in court, telling stories, eating apples, and smoking. They are trying to teach me to smoke a... ... topic he touched on, one felt the gallant heart. . . . He told delightful stories to my children, and no one ever went away from him without strength...